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Extrasolar Earths?

More than one-third of the planet systems detected outside our solar system may harbor earthlike planets covered in deep, global oceans.Provided by the University of Colorado, Boulder

Published: Wednesday, January 17, 2007

An artist's impression of what the surface of an ocean-covered planet in the habitable zone of a system with a "hot Jupiter" might look like.

Nahks Tr'Ehnl

An artist's impression of what the surface of an ocean-covered planet in the habitable zone of a system with a "hot Jupiter" might look like.

Nahks Tr'Ehnl

January 17, 2007More than one-third of the giant planet systems detected outside our solar system may harbor Earth-like planets that offer abundant potential for life, according to a new study by two scientists from Penn State and one from the University of Colorado associated with NASA's Astrobiology Institute. Results from the study were presented last week at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Seattle.

The possibility of discovering Earth-like planets around other stars is of great interest to scientists and non-scientists alike. However, current techniques can only detect giant planets, typically of Neptune to Jupiter-size. Gas giant planets are often hundreds of times more massive than Earth, with no solid surfaces. Current thinking suggests that, even though gas giant planets are much larger than Earth-like, "terrestrial" planets, giant planets form more quickly. Thus, the late stages in terrestrial planet growth are strongly affected by the gravity of the giant planets. The researchers modeled the formation of Earth analogs under the influence of giant planets, with the goal of figuring out which giant planet systems could harbor life.

This image shows the differences (not to scale) between the inner regions of our solar system (upper planets), and a simulated planetary system containing a "hot Jupiter."

Sean Raymond/NASA

The team concluded that slightly more than one out of three of the known planetary systems could have formed as-yet-undetected Earth-like planets in the so-called "habitable zone", where the temperature is right for water to be liquid on the planet's surface, a key factor for life. Their list of potentially habitable systems includes 65 nearby stars with giant planets. "The fraction of known systems that could have the potential for life may be significantly higher than we had thought," said Avi Mandell, a graduate student in the Penn State Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and one of the lead authors on the study. "We hope other researchers may be able to use our new model to narrow the list of potential targets in the search for other Earths," said co-authorSteinn Sigurdsson, associate professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State.

Another interesting result by the team suggests that terrestrial planets in certain planetary systems are likely to be "water worlds", covered in miles-deep global oceans. The systems likely to contain water worlds are those with "hot Jupiters", gas giant planets orbiting extremely close to their host stars. Hot Jupiters are thought to have formed farther out and migrated in to their current location. Watercovered, Earth-like planets form in the wake of the giant planets' migration. "Earth-like planets around nearby stars could be more common than we thought," said Sean Raymond, a NASA postdoctoral fellow at the University of Colorado and co-lead author of the study. "We now think there may be a new class of ocean-covered and possibly habitable planets in solar systems very different from our own."

Two papers were published based on the study: the first appeared in the September 8, 2006, issue of Science. The second is in review at the Astrophysical Journal.